Why content can be king for out of home advertising Lee Mabey, Integration Strategy Director

Out of home advertising was the first mass advertising media platform and has always been used for one purpose, brand building. However, an entirely new way of using the medium is now possible, the ability to broadcast content. One that businesses are only just waking up to.

Out of Home (OOH) advertising has been used to reach audiences and influence behaviour since the time of the Pharoahs. Egyptians used papyrus to make sales messages and wall posters. Indeed Commercial messages and political campaign displays have been found in the ruins of Pompeii and Arabia. When Johannes Gutenberg invented the movable type printer in 1450, modern advertising was introduced through handbills and posters.

Of course, since then and particularly since the 20th century the plethora of methods for advertising has developed at rapid pace, from national newspapers to magazines, cinema, radio, the dawn of the internet to the prevalence of social media. However, OOH’s place in the advertising mix stayed very much the same. That is until the recent deployment of full motion digital screens and the ability to broadcast content. OOH media owners have traditionally not produced their own content, unlike TV channels, meaning it has long been considered as a ‘brand building’ medium. But the dual effects of a maturing digital OOH (DOOH) market (reaching 69% of all UK adults every week) and a national footprint of full motion screens presents an interesting proposition to brands and publishers alike. In the battle to win peoples’ attention a content led approach can be a powerful tool with the same content used on the largest advertising canvas as that used on the smallest in the form of social media ads on your phone.

There are some striking synergies and points of difference between out of home and social the two that businesses can now take advantage of.

1. Both should work without sound – Facebook have said 85% of their videos are watched without sound while digital out of home also offers few sounds enabled opportunities. Despite the huge difference in size the right ad content can be shaped for both.

2. Short form edits – an increasing trend in social content is short form, snackable edits. The maximum slot for most digital out of home is 20 seconds with the need to quickly grab a consumer’s attention as they walk on by. It is the same principle a social media advertiser needs to apply when interrupting someone scrolling. 3. Reach – publishers increasingly rely on consumers to ‘like’ their pages and share their content enabling them to obtain substantial reach. However, while on social people increasing opt for a curated news feed. Out of home offers mass reach and scale and doesn’t require an algorithm or active consumer engagement. This means it is the perfect complement to the social media campaign.

Media owners are already demonstrating the opportunity for content in the UK Out of home marketplace with JCDecaux’s long-standing Sky News partnership across the Transvision network and the full motion Euro Newsedits across Global’s London Underground Digital 48 portfolio. Brands are already making their moves into this space. The recent examples of Land Rover Evoque partnership with The Spoils creating tailored city guides by local influencers on DOOH, tapping into the new content creators, and the Jaguar sponsorship of Ocean’s Wimbledon content (including live match streaming) both successfully demonstrate what can be done with existing assets and sponsorships.

Through working as a content distribution and amplification channel of enormous scale in tune with modern methods outdoor advertising remains the ideal adaptive canvas to communicate the objectives of a brand. If utilised correctly it will continue to be the best way to influence and inspire consumer decisions, just as it has done since the dawn of civilization.

We use cookies to personalise content, to provide social media features and to analyse our traffic. We also share information about your use of our site with our social media, advertising and analytics partners. If you want to change your cookies settings, please see the 'how to reject cookies' section of our cookie policy. Otherwise, if you agree to our use of cookies, please continue to use our website.

Privacy Preference Center

Consent Management

Strictly necessary cookies

We deploy cookies to help us to identify how users navigate to and around our website and to enable some of the features within the site that may be beneficial to you (for example, language preferences, or print page features). This helps us deliver an effective online service to you. These are known as “First Party” cookies.

Cookies Used

ONOFF

__RequestVerificationToken

Functionality Cookies

These cookies allow our sites to remember choices you make (such as user name, or region you are in) and provide enhanced, more personal features. These cookies can also be used to remember changes you have made to text size, fonts and other parts of web page which you can customise. The information these cookies collect may be anonymised and they cannot track your browsing activity on other websites.

Cookies Used

ONOFF

language

Performance cookies

We may also use cookies issued by third parties (“Third Party” cookies) to track the websites you visited or search terms you used immediately prior to visiting this site, or to collect information about how visitors use the site. We use Google Analytics for this purpose. Google Analytics uses its own cookies. These cookies don’t collect information that identify a visitor. All information these cookies collect is aggregated and therefore anonymous. It is only used to improve how the site works. You can find out more about Google Analytics cookies here: https://developers.google.com/analytics/resources/concepts/gaConceptsCookies . You can avoid the use of Google Analytics relating to your use of our site by downloading and installing the Browser Plugin available via this link: http://tools.google.com/dlpage/gaoptout?hl=en-GB.

Cookies Used

ONOFF

_gid, _pk_id*, _gat, _pk_ses*, _ga, JSESSIONID

Social Media Cookies

These cookies are used when you share information using a social media sharing button or “like” button on our site or you link your account or engage with our content on or through a social networking site such as Facebook, Twitter or Google+. The social network will record that you have done this. This information may be linked to targeting/advertising activities.